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In Canadian criminal law, a betting house is any place that is used as a common location for betting or gambling activities that are not lawfully authorized. Under Section 201 of the Criminal Code, keeping a common betting house is a crime, regardless of whether it is open to the public or operates in a private or “members-only” setting. This offence is classified as a hybrid offence, meaning the Crown can choose to proceed either by indictment (more serious) or by summary conviction (less serious). For Uniform Crime Reporting purposes, it is recorded under UCR Code 3210. People researching betting house criminal code Canada issues are usually dealing with situations where a property is being used to organize or manage ongoing betting or gaming activities outside of provincial licensing and regulatory schemes.
The Legal Definition
“Every person who keeps a common gaming house or common betting house is guilty of
(a) an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more than two years; or
(b) an offence punishable on summary conviction.”
This wording from Section 201 of the Criminal Code of Canada establishes the core offence: keeping a common gaming house or common betting house. In plain English, a person can be charged if they are responsible for operating, managing, or maintaining a place that is regularly used for gambling or betting that is not permitted by law. The focus is not just on individual bets, but on the existence of a location that functions as a centre for gambling or betting.
The term “keeps” generally refers to someone who has control or management over the premises or operation, such as an owner, manager, organizer, or person who profits from running the house. A “common betting house” is a place that is commonly (i.e., habitually or regularly) used for the purpose of betting or gaming. It may be a commercial storefront, a private club, a basement, or even a back room in a business. What matters is the regular, organized use of the place for betting, not whether it is openly advertised to the public.
Penalties & Sentencing Framework
- Offence type: Hybrid (prosecutable as indictable or summary).
- Mandatory minimum penalty: None.
- Maximum penalty (indictable): Up to 2 years imprisonment.
- Maximum penalty (summary conviction): Punishable on summary conviction (generally up to 2 years less a day in jail and/or a fine, in line with general summary conviction limits).
Because keeping a betting house is a hybrid offence, the Crown prosecutor decides whether to proceed by indictment or by summary conviction. This decision will usually depend on the seriousness of the operation: for example, the scale of the gambling activity, the amount of money involved, whether it appears linked to organized crime, and whether there are vulnerable participants being exploited. Smaller, less organized operations may be prosecuted summarily, while sophisticated, large-scale betting operations are more likely to draw indictable proceedings.
There is no mandatory minimum sentence under Section 201. This gives sentencing judges considerable discretion. They can impose a range of sentences, such as a discharge (in rare circumstances), fines, probation, conditional sentences (where legally available), or jail terms up to the maximum. For summary conviction prosecutions, the maximum is governed by the general rules for summary offences (typically a shorter jail term and/or fine). For indictable prosecutions, the maximum custodial sentence is two years’ imprisonment.
In sentencing, courts look at general Criminal Code principles: denunciation and deterrence (especially for organized or commercial gambling), the offender’s level of involvement and profit, prior criminal record, and any evidence of harm to the community. Where the betting house is part of a broader pattern of illegal gambling, money laundering, or organized crime, courts are more likely to impose harsher penalties. On the other hand, if the operation is relatively small, non-commercial, and the offender has strong mitigating factors (such as a clean record and cooperation), sentences may be at the lower end, potentially including fines or community-based penalties.
Common Defenses
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Lawful excuse (e.g., provincial licence or authorized activity)
Gambling and betting in Canada are heavily regulated at the provincial and territorial level. Many forms of gaming are legal when conducted under provincial authority, such as government-run lotteries, casinos, racetracks, and licensed charitable gaming events. A key defense to a charge of keeping a betting house is demonstrating a lawful excuse—for example, that the premises and activities were properly licensed or otherwise authorized under provincial legislation. If the betting activities fall squarely within a provincial regulatory framework and all required licences and permits are in place, the Crown may be unable to prove that the house is “illegal” within the meaning of Section 201. The defense will typically involve producing licensing documents, compliance records, and possibly expert evidence on the provincial regulatory scheme.
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Lack of knowledge or control over the premises (no mens rea)
The offence requires proof that the accused “kept” a common betting house, which implies knowledge and some level of control or management over the premises and its use for betting. If the accused did not know that the place was being used for illegal betting, or had no real control over how the premises were used, they may argue that the required mens rea (guilty mind) is missing. For example, a landlord who merely rents out a property without knowledge that the tenant is running a betting house, or an employee with no authority to direct or oversee the gambling activities, may raise this defense. The focus for the court is whether the person truly functioned as a “keeper” of the betting house—someone who organizes, manages, authorizes, or permits the betting activity—not simply someone who is present on-site or has a distant connection to the property.
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Charter rights violations (e.g., unreasonable search under s. 8)
Police investigations into alleged betting houses often involve searches of premises, seizure of cash, betting slips, computers, and surveillance equipment. Under Section 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure. If police enter and search a suspected betting house without a valid warrant (where one is required), or exceed the scope of a warrant, or otherwise conduct the search in an unreasonable manner, the defense can apply to have key evidence excluded. If a court rules that the accused’s Charter rights were breached and that admitting the evidence would bring the administration of justice into disrepute, it may exclude evidence such as betting records, financial documents, or electronic communications. Without that evidence, the Crown may no longer be able to prove that the premises functioned as a common betting house, leading to an acquittal or a stay of proceedings.
Real-World Example
Imagine a private club that secretly hosts weekly poker games with significant cash stakes. Members pay a fee at the door, and the organizers take a percentage of each pot as a “house cut.” The operation is not licensed under provincial gaming laws, and the organizers advertise discreetly by word-of-mouth and private messaging. Even though the location is not a public casino and is accessible only to “members,” the premises are being used regularly and systematically as a place for betting. Under betting house criminal code Canada rules, this private club can be treated as a common betting house.
If police receive a tip and conduct an investigation, gather undercover evidence of regular, ongoing games, and then execute a valid search warrant, they may seize cash, chips, records of buy-ins and payouts, and communications showing organization of the games. The people who run the club—those who control the premises, collect the fees, and organize the games—could be charged under Section 201 for keeping a common betting house. Participants who simply attend to play may face other gambling-related charges depending on the facts, but the primary Section 201 liability focuses on those who “keep” or operate the betting house.
Record Suspensions (Pardons)
A conviction for keeping a betting house creates a criminal record, which can affect employment, travel, immigration, and professional licensing. In Canada, individuals can apply for a record suspension (formerly called a pardon) through the Parole Board of Canada once they have fully completed their sentence and observed a waiting period. For this type of hybrid offence, the waiting period depends on how the Crown proceeded:
If the Crown proceeded by summary conviction, the general waiting period is 5 years after the completion of all parts of the sentence (including probation and payment of any fines or surcharges). If the Crown proceeded by indictment, the waiting period is typically 10 years after all sentence conditions are satisfied. During this time, the person must remain crime-free and demonstrate good conduct. A record suspension, if granted, does not erase the conviction, but it sets it apart from other records and prevents it from showing up on most criminal record checks, which can be critical for people seeking to move on from a past betting house conviction.
Related Violations
- Keeping a Common Gaming House
- Illegal Lottery Schemes
- Participating in a Betting Pool

